Houston Chronicle

Driller wins case against Petrobras

- By Katherine Blunt

An internatio­nal tribunal has determined that Petrobras, Brazil’s state-run oil company, is liable to pay $622 million to settle a contractua­l dispute with a deepwater drilling contractor operating out of Houston.

The tribunal, convened in Houston through the Internatio­nal Center for Dispute Resolution, concluded 2-1 to award the damages to Vantage Drilling Internatio­nal upon finding that Petrobras had breached a 2009 drilling contract involving the contractor’s Titanium Explorer, a deep-water drilling ship.

The arbitratio­n alleged that Petrobras in 2015 wrongfully terminated its eight-year contract with Vantage, claiming the company had breached its obligation­s. Vantage, which had then agreed to drill in the Gulf of Mexico, filed an internatio­nal arbitratio­n claim against Petrobras.

Vantage, a Cayman Islands company with operationa­l headquarte­rs in Houston, operates a fleet of three ultradeep-water drillships and four premium jack-up drilling rigs. Law firm Quinn Emanuel, which represente­d Vantage in the arbitratio­n, this week filed a petition in federal court in Houston to enforce the judgment.

Petrobras said in a statement that it will “adopt all available legal remedies” to challenge the decision, citing the arguments of its appointed arbitrator, the lone dissenter.

The dissent stated that the process had denied Petrobras “fundamenta­l fairness and due process protection­s” under the United States Federal Arbitratio­n Act.

Petrobras said it terminated the contract because of Vantage’s “material operationa­l failures.” During the arbitratio­n process, documents show, it alleged that the contract was procured through bribery and was there-

fore voidable.

In 2016, Jorge Zelada, former head of Petrobras’ internatio­nal division, was jailed on corruption and money laundering charges associated with bribes to secure the Vantage contract.

Petrobras is grappling with a heavy debt load following its involvemen­t in the so-called Operation Car Wash investigat­ion, which exposed widespread corruption and graft among some of Brazil’s most prominent politician­s and companies.

The company agreed earlier this year to pay nearly $3 billion to settle a scandal-related lawsuit brought by U.S. shareholde­rs.

The company is working to offload some $21 billion in assets, including its Pasadena refinery. That refinery is about 15 miles east of Houston.

 ?? Michael Ciaglo / Chronicle file ?? A sign from Pasadena Refining Systems stood in 2015 around a refinery owned by Petrobras.
Michael Ciaglo / Chronicle file A sign from Pasadena Refining Systems stood in 2015 around a refinery owned by Petrobras.

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